The nature that Mussolini and other fascists love and admire is one that is created by the regime and subjugated to its design.
Marco Armiero, Roberta Biasillo, and Wilko Graf von Hardenberg | Apr 13, 2023
A new book takes an inspiring look at wildlife species that are defying the odds and teaching important lessons about how to share a planet.
Rebecca Foster | Mar 30, 2023
How do organisms that are so sedentary end up being so incredibly widely dispersed?
Thom van Dooren | Mar 20, 2023
The PCB story in Bloomington remains compelling in its specificity; yet, it also serves as a representative anecdote for the impact of modern industrial and chemical revolutions on the U.S. landscape.
Phaedra C. Pezzullo | Feb 9, 2023
Thom van Dooren's new book about efforts to save endangered snails in Hawai‘i provides valuable insight into threats to global biodiversity.
Tara Lohan / The Revelator | Jan 9, 2023
This month on the Sustainable City show, we explore a new model of city governance, mapping the route to more equitable, sustainable management of urban infrastructure and services.
William Shutkin & Andy Bush | Dec 12, 2022
In the early 1900s, when the memory of the famines was still fresh, western India became the stage for a powerful anti-caste movement that challenged socially sanctioned forms of deprivation.
Tirthankar Roy | Nov 21, 2022
My family introduced me not only to plant knowledge but also to a frame through which I place myself into my environment and universe.
Enrique Salmón | Nov 14, 2022
Green architecture can solve the climate change problem, but only once it stops creating new ones.
Eric Cesal | Nov 7, 2022
We may already have a "miracle" fix for climate change: Electrify everything.
Saul Griffith | Sep 26, 2022